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An investigation into the need of a dynamic coupled well-reservoir simulator

Authors :
Nennie, E. D.
Alberts, G. J. N.
Belfroid, S. P. C.
Elisabeth Peters
Joosten, G. J. P.
TNO Industrie en Techniek
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier, SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition 2007, ATCE 2007, 11 November 2007 through 14 November 2007, Anaheim, CA, USA, Conference code: 71497, 4, 2461-2469

Abstract

Within the research framework of the "Integrated System Approach Petroleum Production" (ISAPP) knowledge center of TNO, TU Delft and Shell, the necessity of taking the interaction between dynamic reservoir and dynamic well behavior into account when optimizing a producing asset is investigated. To simulate dynamic phenomena in the well and in the reservoir, a dynamic multiphase well simulation tool (OLGA) and a dynamic multiphase reservoir simulator (MoReS) have been used. Both simulators have been coupled using an explicit scheme. The dynamic well simulator, the dynamic reservoir simulator and the coupled dynamic well-reservoir simulator have been used to simulate a realistic test case which consists of a horizontal well with three inflow sections located in a thin oil rim. A number of scenarios are investigated that play a crucial role during different stages of the well's lifetime: naturally occurring phenomena, e.g. coning, and production dynamics, e.g. shut-in. The results of dynamic well simulations, dynamic reservoir simulations and coupled well-reservoir simulations are presented and an overview is given of the cases where the results of the coupled simulations are significantly more accurate in comparison to stand-alone well or reservoir simulations. For gas coning it is shown that the coupled simulator has much faster pressure transients after gas breakthrough than the dynamic reservoir simulator. Therefore, the coupled well-reservoir simulator should be used to simulate gas breakthrough and to optimize production using gas coning control. For small time scale phenomena, order of less then one day, the well and reservoir transients overlap. Simulations show that the coupled simulator is essential for an accurate prediction of the well-reservoir interaction during these small time scale phenomena.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier, SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition 2007, ATCE 2007, 11 November 2007 through 14 November 2007, Anaheim, CA, USA, Conference code: 71497, 4, 2461-2469
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab3a413deed6e2a81244e3bb9ec35db1